{"title":"注意差距:重新审视饮食失调检查的有效性、一致性和范围。评述Reilly et al.(2025)。","authors":"Ricarda Schmidt","doi":"10.1002/eat.24509","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>This commentary responds to Reilly et al.'s (2025) forum article and focuses primarily on Area of Focus #2: ensuring group-specific validity and adaptability of eating disorder assessment tools. Using the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE) as a case example, it is argued that psychometric flexibility must be accompanied by empirical accountability. Specifically, the commentary highlights the importance of testing measurement invariance (MI) to evaluate whether tools like the EDE function equivalently across different populations and time points. This is particularly relevant as the EDE or its self-report version (EDE-Q) are increasingly being used in populations for which they were not originally designed, for example, individuals with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder or people of diverse gender identities. Additionally, the commentary discusses the need for harmonization between different versions of the instrument (EDE vs. EDE-Q), and calls for greater transparency in reporting and applying scoring conventions. A further consideration is the consistency of application across raters and research contexts, suggesting that interrater reliability should be examined more systematically across sites. Drawing on the metaphor of a long-serving but evolving vehicle, the commentary argues that modernization is necessary, but must not come at the cost of clinical depth or training relevance. 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Using the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE) as a case example, it is argued that psychometric flexibility must be accompanied by empirical accountability. Specifically, the commentary highlights the importance of testing measurement invariance (MI) to evaluate whether tools like the EDE function equivalently across different populations and time points. This is particularly relevant as the EDE or its self-report version (EDE-Q) are increasingly being used in populations for which they were not originally designed, for example, individuals with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder or people of diverse gender identities. Additionally, the commentary discusses the need for harmonization between different versions of the instrument (EDE vs. EDE-Q), and calls for greater transparency in reporting and applying scoring conventions. 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Mind the Gaps: Revisiting the Validity, Consistency, and Scope of the Eating Disorder Examination. A Commentary on Reilly et al. (2025)
This commentary responds to Reilly et al.'s (2025) forum article and focuses primarily on Area of Focus #2: ensuring group-specific validity and adaptability of eating disorder assessment tools. Using the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE) as a case example, it is argued that psychometric flexibility must be accompanied by empirical accountability. Specifically, the commentary highlights the importance of testing measurement invariance (MI) to evaluate whether tools like the EDE function equivalently across different populations and time points. This is particularly relevant as the EDE or its self-report version (EDE-Q) are increasingly being used in populations for which they were not originally designed, for example, individuals with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder or people of diverse gender identities. Additionally, the commentary discusses the need for harmonization between different versions of the instrument (EDE vs. EDE-Q), and calls for greater transparency in reporting and applying scoring conventions. A further consideration is the consistency of application across raters and research contexts, suggesting that interrater reliability should be examined more systematically across sites. Drawing on the metaphor of a long-serving but evolving vehicle, the commentary argues that modernization is necessary, but must not come at the cost of clinical depth or training relevance. Knowing how to drive remains essential, even when upgrading the vehicle.
期刊介绍:
Articles featured in the journal describe state-of-the-art scientific research on theory, methodology, etiology, clinical practice, and policy related to eating disorders, as well as contributions that facilitate scholarly critique and discussion of science and practice in the field. Theoretical and empirical work on obesity or healthy eating falls within the journal’s scope inasmuch as it facilitates the advancement of efforts to describe and understand, prevent, or treat eating disorders. IJED welcomes submissions from all regions of the world and representing all levels of inquiry (including basic science, clinical trials, implementation research, and dissemination studies), and across a full range of scientific methods, disciplines, and approaches.